In This Issue Organic Hydroponic? . . . . . . . . 4 Lexicon of Sustainability . . . . 8 Organic Dairy Wins Award . . . . 14 Farm Insurance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 NOFA VT Board Ballot . . . . . . 19 The Quarterly Newsletter of the Northeast Organic Farming Association of Vermont
Tapping the Market: Butternut Mountain Farm Brings Vermont Maple to the Masses by Caitlin Jenness, NOFA Vermont Beginning Farmer Programs Coordinator and Revolving Loan Fund Administrator
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n the 1970s, David Marvin started a small sugaring operation on his family’s land in Johnson, Vermont. Over the last 40 years, Marvin’s personal and business philosophy has led him to build a thriving company while staying true to the old-fashioned rural values that prioritize personal relationships and quality products. The once-small sugaring operation in Johnson now encompasses approximately 16,000 taps, and Butternut Mountain Farm employs over 85 people packaging and distributing syrup from over 300 producers to a range of customers, including major retail and grocery chains and natural foods markets throughout the nation. This syrup, processed in the heart of Morrisville, is sold locally and online under the Butternut Mountain Farm label, bottled for numerous retailers’ private label brands, processed into maple sugar and candies, and sold to food producers who use it in products ranging from specialty cheese to vodka. When Marvin began sugaring, Vermont produced an estimated 225,000 gallons of syrup per year, but efficiencies in production, namely sap collection and boiling technologies, have allowed Vermont’s maple syrup industry to expand significantly; last year Vermont’s maple syrup production neared 1,300,000 gallons. That’s a quantity that even Vermont’s devoted maple-loving population can’t hope to consume locally, so much of the syrup is sold out-of-state through various markets: approximately 15% of the state’s production is sold directly through retail channels, and the remainder is sold either as bulk or wholesale. As an aggregator and distributor, Butternut Mountain Farm serves an important role that
Photo courtesy Butternut Mountain Farm
allows Vermont syrup from many family farms to reach these larger markets. Marvin grew up surrounded by the sugaring industry; his father, a professor of botany at the University of Vermont (UVM), co-founded UVM’s Proctor Research Center in Underhill, VT which focuses on research, demonstration, and education about sugar maples, collection, evaporation, and other management issues affecting the industry. In 1972, after completing his degree in Forestry at UVM and a few years in the Forest Service, Marvin wanted to return to his family’s land in Johnson. Dairy farming had little appeal, so he started a Christmas tree farm and a small sugaring operation. In those first few years he sold his syrup primarily at the Burlington Farmers Market and through a mail-order list. Over time, he added retail customers and a delivery route around the state, continuing to expand his operation to meet this demand. In the 1980s, after facing two difficult sugaring seasons back-to-back, Marvin found he was unable to fill his Continued on page 6 »